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The have also maintained they have the right to conduct �outbound� inspections on

drivers leaving the U.S. but before they reach the Canadian border. This is rarely
done given limited resources but does occur � for example, inspections were done on
autos leaving the U.S. and heading to Vancouver at various times during the 2010
winter Olympics.

ou should be aware that U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents have asserted the
right to check anyone within 100 miles (165 km) of an international border. This
places the entire state of Michigan within their search radius.

All of these policies are periodically challenged in the courts so there may be
changes in the future, but as of this writing this is the law.

ourts have granted customs agents extensive rights to search, without probable
cause, literally anything you have with you when you cross the U.S. / Canadian
border. U.S. courts have upheld the U.S. Customs and Border Protection�s right to
perform searches that might otherwise violate a U.S. citizen�s Fourth Amendment
rights. Both the U.S. and Canadian border services assert the right to search �
and seize � any electronic or digital storage devices such as laptops, tablets,
discs, digital cameras, cell phones, and hard drives. U.S. Customs searches over
30,000 phones and other electronic devices per year.

A Toronto man says he's tired of waking up to the smell of weed coming in from his
neighbour's unit and wants his condo corporation to do more to resolve the issue.

For almost five years, Paul Bradshaw says, smoke has been seeping in through the
front door, windows and electrical sockets. Then it flows into the room belonging
to his seven-year-old son, Sam.

"It wakes him

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